It happens constantly to both myself and my duo partner. It can happen with any amount of bullets left in the rifle, and I have had it jam after a single shot on more than one occasion. The gun will click and act as if it is unloaded until you reload at least one bullet.

I haven't played with the Mosin nagant yet, but the jamming has also happened with the vetterli.

It looks like right ventricular outflow tract VT to me, having a precordial LBBB morphology and an inferior axis.
Incidentally, RVOT is also responsive to adenosine which may explain how it was reverted.

The delta waves in the subsequent ecgs do point to some form of antidromic avrt though

Atrial fib with a left block your axis is -49. I would be curious to see if this is a new on set block or a old block. I am still relatively new to ECG's, but that's what I would go with. I am also a little worried about the sinus pause in V1, V2, and V3.

I would have started an IV, drawn blood, administered fluids due to the patient being sick, and checked a blood sugar just to rule out hypoglycemia.

Be careful when imagining these scenarios to make your decisions, there is no evidence that VEN/VEC will go anywhere near 50-100, let alone in the near future. Similar to that, nobody knows how much THOR will be worth.

I'm not saying it wont work and be profitable to sell your BTC and run a node, but try to use conservative numbers when you make your decision, not just best case scenarios

Could you explain to me whats happened to their arm? To me it looks like there could be some kind of outer sheath created by the oil, over the top of the arm. Or is that mess the actual arm and its gonna look like that forever?

You can see from the picture there is a part of the fence missing from where they didn't turn and kept going straight through the fence. The dent in the bonnet is also from one of the steel poles in the chainlink fence

Yeah, but how? It's a gentle bend in a 50, maybe 60k zone - anyone who actually holds a valid license with more than 2 hours driving experience should be able to take that curve doing at least 80 or 90, let alone 50 or 60.

While bones aren't literally full of blood, they have veins and arteries that run along the outside of the bone and also inside it. Breaks in large bones can cause significant blood loss, femurs can bleed up to about 1.5L each leg which is life threatening.

Mmmmmmm....nope. That's not true. First, medics don't care about the guys helmet or where it is. Second, if he has no head, that's no longer a medical problem, it's a police investigation and a student would not be sent to move evidence, especially by an emt. Good story, but not true.

What do you mean we don't care about the helmet? Damage to the helmet is a great indicator to the kind of forces that the head itself would have received inside it. Normally we bring the helmet to the hospital to show the doctors even.